Hi guys,
I am sixteen years and have played the piano since my fifth, but only became serious about it when I was around eight. Now, after I've become acquainted with the standard repertoire I would like to learn to improvise. Since I am also studying composition and counterpoint I think it would be a very helpful skill for it.
However, all I can find online is how to learn jazz improvisation, but I want to learn classical improvisation mostly in the styles of Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. Can anyone help me to head off with this? I really don't know where to start.
BW,
Marijn
At the age of thirteen, the late Earl Wild (from Pittsburgh) was offered a gig playing jazz piano at a night club down in Florida, U.S. The pay was $300 a week, which was a whole lot of money in those days.
He turned down the gig because he wanted to focus his studies on the classical repertoire, and his father never spoke to him again. A year later, he abandoned his family, and Earl Wild had to go to work writing arrangements, in order to support his mother and his younger brother (Brahms?).
So, when a prior post tells you that improv starts with a solid working knowledge of theory, it means just that. However, Earl Wild was the one of the very few American pianists who was taught in the European pedagogical tradition.
In the 17th, 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries, every serious musician was required to learn performance from one teacher and composition/theory from another; because each performer was not only expected to play their own compositions, they were also expected to improvise an introductory summary of what was to come in a particular performance.
The formal term for this is "Preluding." Jazzers still call it an intro. Kenneth Hamilton, in his book, "The Golden Age," spends an entire chapter on this subject. Today, this is a highly discussed topic by musicologists, worldwide.
Finally, as to how you get from here to there, my advice is as follows:
1) Find an organist, who has a Doctorate in performance, and who is also a composer, with a minimum of 30 years experience. Believe me, they are out there because every graduate organ performance major in the world is required to learn classical improvisation.
2) If you can find said instructor, she/he can also school you on the actual mechanics of writing music. Then, you will be well on your way to achieving your goal.
Most importantly, please, please, please! go at your own pace, and do not set the bar based on what any one else has done before you. You have to get there in your own way, and in your own time.
Otherwise you will burn yourself out, and all will be lost.
"Musica es amore!" Music is love, and not some stupid contest.